powergage
Electrical
- Jun 25, 2003
- 22
I need to establish a load profile for our DC battery system at a U.S. power plant. The profile is being used to evaluate the adequacy of size of our battery system. I have two questions:
1) What is a typical estimate for DC current needed for 2400V switchgear to trip? I know that the tripping circuit does not require very much power. I was using 5 amps for a duration of 1 minute as my estimate. I was guessing that actual load would be more like 1-2 amps for a split second. Is my estimate adequate?
2) What is a typical estimate for inrush current on DC motors? I have two 125VDC motors tied to the system. One is a 7.5 HP, 3500 rpm motor rated at 53 amps. The other is a 140 HP, 3500 rpm motor rated at 140 amps. My guess was to assume an inrush current at 3 times the nameplate rated amperage for 1 minute. Is this a good estimate. (I realize that the inrush will not continue for 1 minute, but that is how long IEEE 485-1997 recommends that you estimate inrush current for.)
Any input into intuition would be great!
powergage
1) What is a typical estimate for DC current needed for 2400V switchgear to trip? I know that the tripping circuit does not require very much power. I was using 5 amps for a duration of 1 minute as my estimate. I was guessing that actual load would be more like 1-2 amps for a split second. Is my estimate adequate?
2) What is a typical estimate for inrush current on DC motors? I have two 125VDC motors tied to the system. One is a 7.5 HP, 3500 rpm motor rated at 53 amps. The other is a 140 HP, 3500 rpm motor rated at 140 amps. My guess was to assume an inrush current at 3 times the nameplate rated amperage for 1 minute. Is this a good estimate. (I realize that the inrush will not continue for 1 minute, but that is how long IEEE 485-1997 recommends that you estimate inrush current for.)
Any input into intuition would be great!
powergage